A painting by French artist Sébastien Norblin depicts Antigone kneeling over the body of her brother Polynices, who has been denied a proper burial by King Creon. Antigone is imprisoned for refusing to comply with the king’s orders and is locked in a tomb where she hangs herself. The characters are reimagined in Home Fire as Aneeka, her twin brother Parvaiz and the British Home Secretary Karamat Lone | Wikimedia Commons
“My own flesh and blood — dear sister, dear Ismene,
How many griefs our father Oedipus handed down!”
— Antigone, Sophocles
(tr: Robert Fagles)
London, Raqqa, Karachi, with a layover in Istanbul. These are the cities of our times — as Man Booker-longlisted author Kamila Shamsie reminds us in her seventh and most arresting work yet. Though the novel begins in Amherst, Massachusetts, with Isma — a sober, prematurely aged young woman — the sleepy town and the earnest PhD student soon give way to the age-old clash between the lived realities of ordinary people and the all-effacing power of state and government. And still, Home Fire is not just another fashionable novel written to waltz in time with today’s breaking news, or to woo the 21st century’s major metropolises. It is, at its heart, a deeply felt work about migrant men and women and the never-ending, exhausting drama of being a hyphenated citizen in the West.
Shamsie’s last two novels, Burnt Shadows and A God in Every Stone, laid out a terrifying yet oddly bearable solitude that women must endure and eventually embrace in the contemporary metropolis, be it Karachi or London. Both cities turn up in Home Fire, but very differently from their earlier versions. In this novel, London is the battleground for belonging. Shamsie takes us from the warm, multi-ethnic and, on occasion, dark streets of Wembley to the serenity of Notting Hill, right up till the edge of the city where we feel the harsh white lights of an interrogation room at Heathrow Airport and the security pat-down of a young Muslim woman. In Karachi, Shamsie unromantically reminds us of sunsets that “bruise the sky,” of the “hurling, pelting wind” of a dust storm and of the opportunists that join causes they know and care nothing of.
Isma and her siblings, twins Aneeka and Parvaiz, grow up in Wembley, in the kind of home where there is “Arabic calligraphy on the wall”, “carpeted stairs”, “plastic flowers in a vase” and “the scent of spices despite there being nothing on the stove.” Eamonn, the son of the Pakistani-origin British Home Secretary Karamat Lone, walks into their lives from the manicured and affluent Notting Hill. As much as Isma and the twins try to forget, their days are haunted by their father’s past as an extremist fighter and his death at Bagram prison in Afghanistan. When Eamonn comes into Aneeka’s life, he has already learned about her father from Isma, but it is Aneeka who has to break the news to him that her twin Parvaiz has made his way to “the Caliphate”, or the war-torn city of Raqqa controlled by the militant group calling itself the Islamic State (IS). Even as Aneeka finds herself in a battle against the only place she can call home, Eamonn is drawn into a battle against blood itself: on the one side is his father who has long ago disavowed his Muslim and Pakistani descent, aligning himself against migrants and for security, and on the other is Aneeka, his great love and fiancée, who is desperate for “justice” even if it goes against the law.
A modern retelling of an ancient classic spotlights today’s multicultural world caught up in the web of racism, terrorism and social injustice
Signature Shamsie: the female characters — Aneeka, Isma, Lone’s Irish-American wife Terry, even the benign elderly neighbour Aunty Naseem — all are nothing short of fierce. Each one has been separately devastated in the wake of decisions made by the men in her life; Isma, Aneeka and Naseem by Parvaiz, Terry by Lone, yet the women of Home Fire claw and fight their way through with whatever means are available to them.
At the Karachi launch of Shamsie’s last novel, I quizzed her briefly on the recurrence of the compelling yet solitary female characters that had begun to appear in her later works: Hiroko in Burnt Shadows, Vivian in A God in Every Stone. Shamsie, in her usual stoic manner, responded quite simply: “The truth is, most women end up solitary because most women lose their husbands… you’re far more likely than a man to end up solitary; it’s simply a fact and strange that fiction doesn’t recognise it more.”